Enrollment across Maine’s community college system is breaking records this fall, surpassing 20,000 students for the first time. That’s a 10 percent increase from last year.
System President David Daigler credits much of the growth to the state’s free community college program, launched by Gov. Janet Mills in 2022.
“We have found a tremendous number of students who really didn’t think college was a part of their future until this free college program was rolled out,” he said. “So it’s been a tremendous success.”
Some 17,000 students have taken advantage of that program.
Still, Daigler said the growth has created challenges, including increased faculty workloads.
“They want to make sure that they meet that student’s needs. Now they’ve got more students sort of at their door, and they feel that pressure,” Daigler said.
Daigler said an expansion of health care and manufacturing programs also has driven higher enrollment, and that transfer partnerships with the UMaine system have attracted students looking for a stepping stone to a four-year degree.
Percentage wise, Washington County Community College saw the greatest enrollment increase, jumping 18 percent year over year.
This article appears through a media partnership with Maine Public.